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by nabla9 857 days ago
Many do that, but discussion and readers are in Twitter. Crossposting to nothing is cheap but yields nothing.

Cory Doctorow

Mastodon: @pluralistic@mamot.fr 909 Following, 54K Followers

Twitter: @doctorow, 2,814 Following, 494.4K Followers

2 comments

And actually it isn’t that cheap because if you post to say 4 (X, Bluesky, mastodon, Facebook), you now have to choose where you’re going to spend time reading and responding to others. On all of them or just on X, where the gravity is.
The problem I rarely see discussed is that if one user I follow posts to Twitter and Bluesky simultaneously and another totally left Twitter for Bluesky I as a Bluesky reader will have a mix of posts I have already seen on Twitter and original Bluesky posts on my timeline. There needs to be a way to somehow mark and filter crossposted content.
Why would you follow the same person on two platforms if posts are the same?
Yeah, that's a fair question and I usually don't do that if user posts more than 1-2 posts per day. But it's hard to know how the account will be used in advance when user says "I made an account on Bluesky, follow me there".
Obviously you choose a platform which you want to promote. Hopefully the decentralized and FLOSS one (Mastodon).
To me, you numbers demonstrate that it works very well: compare the whole userbases of the two platforms and you will see that the engagement on Mastodon is larger and growing fast.
Active number of users has fallen over 1 million from the Twitter exodus times.

There are lots of inactive accounts.